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Archive for the ‘Classics’ Category

GM Names Its Top 10 Production Cars

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1999 GM (Specialty Vehicles) EV1 As it preps for its 100th anniversary celebration in a few weeks, General Motors has been digging through its archives to name its top 10 production cars built in its history.

There are some familiar names on the list--maybe you've heard of the Corvette or the Chevy Bel Air? Other choices are a little more esoteric, like the 1927 LaSalle, and some seem like kudos thrown to various parts of the General Motors empire for political reasons--we're talking about the influential-but-maybe-not-earth-shattering Saab 92 here.

It's one way to kick off an anniversary celebration--and another way to trigger endless rounds of bar trivia and free drinks, which sounds like the highest purpose we can think of. Disagree with any of these choices? Tell us in a comment below while we try to shoehorn in an 11th nod on the list (what, you're going to diss the Fiero, guys?):

1996 EV1 (shown above): GM bills this one as the industry's first production electric vehicle. Powered by battery and charged overnight at home, the EV1 gave GM an image headache in later years after it pulled the plug--and enraged environmentalists.

1964 Pontiac GTO1964 Pontiac GTO: They call this one the first musclecar, and they may be right--it's a lot clearer than, say, the "first rock-n-roll record" or the "first person to predict Amy Winehouse's current state of deshabillement." The "Goat" started life as a Tempest, and stirred a tempest in a teapot that still reverbs at GM today in the form of the 2010 Camaro and the '09 Corvette ZR1.

1955 Chevrolet Bel Air1955 Chevrolet Bel Air: Does anything say "fabulous" more than a pink-and-white (or turquoise-and-white) Bel Air with three ladies turning heads from the front seat? You can smell the burgers at the drive-in and practically feel the onset of Eisenhower's first heart attack when you come within 50 feet of one of these ultimate styling statements. We're not exactly sure what it's saying, but it's not saying anything about "change we can believe in," that's for damn sure.

1953 Chevrolet Corvette1953 Chevrolet Corvette: What started so simple and has evolved into a 205-mph maniac came from GM's Motorama drawing boards, and immediately drew gasps, sighs, and a return volley from Ford in the shape of the Thunderbird. The first Corvette was no race champion, but it set the Chevrolet bar higher than any car before it.

1950 Saab 921950 Saab 92: The peace dividend in ur-form? Saab engineers leaned on aircraft influences to pen the first Saab 92 and painted all of them green. Both catchy themes are still in evidence today at the Swedish automaker, though things like seat belts and safety glass have brightened the picture measurably for drivers and passengers alike.

1936 Opel Olympia1936 Opel Olympia: Creepy allusions to the Olympics of the same year aside, this Opel's on the list, GM says, because it pioneered unibody construction. It led to lightweight cars with better safety, GM says--and one-upped the more uppity German brands on their home turf. Kind of like Jesse Owens did, right?

1930 Cadillac V-161930 Cadillac V-16: If you couldn't count to 16 in 1930, you might have been totally left out of the magic of the Cadillac of that year. Thank goodness for GEDs and friends with higher math skills--nothing like the V-16 Caddy had ever existed and, with CAFE changing the market as much as the housing crisis, you'll never see anything like it again from GM. Unless our kit-car project of welding four Fieros together, comes together. (What is it with the Fiero? Pure, unadulterated passion.)

1927 LaSalle1927 LaSalle: It's all about the look, GM says. The LaSalle was the first vehicle to have emerged from the hand of star designer--in this case, the inimitable Harley Earl. The attention lavished on this sub-Cadillac birthed the era of real automotive style, something that even GM's Aztek couldn't kill.

1912 Cadillac1912 Cadillac: The semi-lascivious headline notwithstanding, this ad speaks of the revolution under the hood in cars of the early 20th century. Not having to stand in front of a car and crank its engine to life--potentially breaking an arm in the process--was a heady advancement of the day. Note to salesmen everywhere: Less injury is totally a USP.

1910 Cadillac Model 301910 Cadillac Model 30: Rival Ford might have jumped its guns with the mass-produced Model T, but GM says this Caddy was the first closed-in car to be built in mass quantities. This made it better than the more plebeian cars that subject their owners to dirt, dust, rain, and...well, the masses. Highfalutin' features like a single taillight were apparently the bees' knees. Were those the days? Yes, we think in fact they were.

Mustang Alley Coming to Dream Cruise

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2009 Ford Mustang BullittWhile the Pebble Beach Concours hosts the heavy cream of the auto world, the Woodward Dream Cruise is getting the red meat--thousands of classic cars, and, Ford says, the biggest collection of Mustangs new and old.

The Ford display will be the biggest of any automakers, the Dearborn-based car company says, and it's going to be open from August 15 to 17. The special "Mustang Alley" will put about 450 'Stangs on display on August 16. Ford will raffle off Mustang merch to benefit the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation.

Along with the Mustangs, Ford will also show off from its collections of Model T cars. The Model T turned 100 this year, while the Mustang is celebrating its 45th anniversary.

The Dream Cruise is set for August 16 in the Detroit area, stretching up Woodward Avenue from the city of Detroit past the suburbs of Royal Oak and Birmingham. Organizers expect 1.5 million visitors to swamp the area with all manner of trailer queens, instant classics, and oddities like the toilet-on-a-trailer we've shown you dozens of times in years prior.

Eight Cars to Drive Before You Die

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Your everyday car may be special to you, what with its nice rims, a cool satellite radio system, enough room in the console to hide evidence of trips to Carvel. Chances are, though, it's a Camry, Accord, Fusion, or Malibu--all fine cars, but not really epic examples of the history of carmaking.

Throughout the history of cars, there have been hallmarks, cars that changed the course of history or simply put the logo on the sign of the times. If you need an education on what cars are all about, there's an easy way to get a primer on autos through time: drive them. By our measure, there are at least eight cars you need to drive before you die, so you know where cars came from, where they're going, how good they can be, and how awful, too.

TheCarConnection.com's eight cars to drive before you die are these classics:

2000 Mazda MiataMazda Miata
You don't know how well a car can handle until you drive one of Mazda's essential roadsters. The Miata's reflexes feel like they were hardwired by God, and its controls penned by Apple. Beautifully executed and honest to its core, the Miata's steering alone would put it in this group. No car has ever felt this neural, and it's hard to think any other car ever will. It's best to get into a pristine first-generation car if you can, but those are becoming rarer as time goes by; 2008's Miata is almost up to the glory days of the original.

2009 Chevrolet Corvette ZR1Chevrolet Corvette ZR1
OK, we haven't driven it yet, either. And maybe there's less of a chance you'll get into this than into a mid-'60s Sting Ray Corvette. You need to experience ultimate power, though, and the whole Formula 1 career isn't really taking off, is it? Beg, borrow or steal to get a ride in this one into low geosynchronous orbit, and then you can chuckle at Sergey Brin: $5 million to go into real space is a waste when you can own this for $100,000.

1914 Ford Model TModel T
To know where you're going,you have to know where you've been. Didn't Pete Townsend say that? Start with the car that changed the world, but be prepared. Model Ts aren't easy to drive. They have to be started, shifted, and slowed in ways you've never dreamed of. Luckily, owners of these cars seem to have hours to explain to you exactly how the rudimentary ur-car operates, and the incredibly crude ride will bounce you awake while they shout out T-trivia on the roll.

Volkswagen BeetleVolkswagen Beetle
Mechanical simplicity, thy name is Beetle. You really can repair this car with office supplies, and its purity makes the Beetle even more a contrast with today's crash-perfect, desensitized, ball-bearing-tight new cars. Beetle heaters don't work, wipers are a cruel joke, and power is high concept, but it moves you in other ways.


2009 Porsche 911Porsche 911
The engine's out back, the cylinders are opposed instead of working together--and still, when a Porsche 911 fires up,right at the base of your spine, you merge with its manic rhythms. The hammering of pistons in your ear amplifies the direct heft of the steering, and the drop-away view of the road ahead is as close to a racecar as you can find on a modern-day production car. Pretend you're Hurley Haywood if you want--just don't play Autobahn unless the coast is clear.

2004 HUMMER H1AM General Hummer/HUMMER H1
You can't drive an Abrams tank, so this is the closest you'll ever get. You'll also get the contact thrill of 1990s nostalgia, when gas was plentiful, the Oval Office served dual purposes, and being a rock star/movie god/media icon meant tooling up to a red carpet in something impossible for any valet to park. Never mind the wars going on in the background--orthodontists and day traders need love too. Full speed ahead!

Rolls-Royce PhantomRolls-Royce Phantom
Don't fuss with the nonsense of a stretch limousine; find a way to be chauffeured in the Phantom (or the Mercedes-built Maybach 62) and savor the experience. Tip the rear seats back, flip down a walnut tray outfitted with a properly aged Scotch paired with Diana Krall's Live in Paris DVD on the rear-seat entertainment system, and let someone else worry about the traffic ahead. It's OK if you don't wave to the peons outside.


1982 Cadillac CimarronCadillac Cimarron
Slow can be forgiven; sometimes even ugly, too. The Cimarron ("By Cadillac") was unforgivable, coming from "the standard of the world." Its utterly synthetic, soulless attempt to save Caddy's bacon turned off even GM's hardcore audience. Most galling detail: keys coated in gold plastic that wore off before the warranty expired. Congratulations, Cimarron. You sucked on so many levels, we're still talking about you today.

Honorable Mentions
Honda CRX: Perhaps the best-handling front-wheel-drive car ever, the CRX marked the beginning of Honda's Golden Age.

Lamborghini Murcielago: The view from the wheel of this winged bat out of hell is extraordinary and almost alien--and its performance is astonishing.

Jeep Wrangler: The only vehicle to go from World War II combat duty into the national lexicon, it's shorthand for adventure.

Toyota Prius: Geek culture rules the world now--and the Prius is proof of its good, green side.

Smart fortwo: Sitting on the continental divide between cars and roller skates, the smart fortwo points to where cars are going, for better or worse.

Have a nominee of your own? Add it in a comment below!

Yeah, But Did You Wreck a Pontiac GTO Today?

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WreckedExotics.com GTO and Police CarYou could be a recruiter or a sales technician or an endocrinologist, but trust me when I say this is a job description you want: car wrecker.

While I'm down here in TCC's world headquarters in sunny Palo Alto, Gregg at WreckedExotics.com was on hand to catch the filming of a stunt in downtown San Francisco. And I'm jealous because I've never sent a car into the air. I have been strapped to the hood of one that ran--twice--through a wall of fire, but that was less about fulfillment and more about being 24 years old. And dumb.

This looks like a lot more fun--helming a stunt car as it hurtles down a San Francisco street. "My buddy let me know about a stunt that was being filmed by the BBC on his street in San Francisco this afternoon," Gregg e-mailed us. The stunt was being filmed for an unknown commercial.

"The cars flew about 30 feet and caught about 9 feet of air," Gregg says, and we believe him, based on forensic evidence like the mushed nose of the Goat lookalike after the stunt ended.

We think maybe the Brits were trying to get the real, authentic feel of an American city by building an elaborate launch ramp on a hilly street and by using late-'60s lookalike cars to crash around like all American drivers do, but that's just a guess. Watch the YouTube video clip here, and see if you can catch up to the hubcap that blasts free at impact. We think it's still rolling around the Marina district somewhere.

Roll tape:


Ten Cars of Infamy: Bonnie & Clyde’s Ford V-8

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The history of cars is full of heartwarming stories and happy endings—but just as full of dark corners, blind alleys and high-speed tragedy. Some cars have become part of our culture, because of their role in murder and mayhem. They're infamous.

TheCarConnection.com’s ten most infamous cars start right here with the Model A that sped into history, piloted by Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker.

From the time they met in January 1930, Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker were on a date with a bloody destiny. Barrow, just 21 in that year, went to jail for burglary, but didn't stay long: Parker smuggled him in a gun and he escaped, only to be recaptured and sent to jail for 14 years. After having two toes cut off in jail by another inmate to avoid work detail, Barrow got a pardon after a plea by his mother.

And that began the crime spree that spawned the legend of Bonnie and Clyde. They formed a gang, with Clyde's brother Buck Barrow and his wife Blanche; gunman Raymond Hamilton; and W.D. Jones, and made their way across five states from Missouri to Texas, robbing banks and gas stations and stores and building a name as outlaws.

The press ate up their story -- and so did the public, at least until their crimes turned deadly. Over the course of four years, their gang crimes tallied 13 deaths, including a handful of police officers. They killed a police officer early in 1934 in Grapevine, Texas; another, five days later in Oklahoma.

To get from murder to murder, and robbery to robbery, the Barrow gang stole cars -- among them the Ford V-8 that would become notorious as the Bonnie and Clyde death car. Barrow was famous for his love of Fords, and in the day, the V-8 Ford was the fastest car on the road. Barrow may or may not have written a letter to Ford Motor Company, saying that it "has got every other car skinned," in fact.

In the spring of 1934 the Barrow gang stole a Ford V-8 Deluxe with a greyhound hood ornament, with a little less than 1000 miles. Ruth and Jesse Warren were the owners, and had bought it only recently from a Ford dealer in Topeka, Kansas. It was nearly new, but over the next few weeks the Barrow gang would put nearly 7000 miles on it in their crime spree.

During that final run, gang members were picked off by the law, or caught and jailed. But Bonnie and Clyde remained free until May of 1934, when authorities decided to take them out. The Texas police made their way to Bienville Parish, Louisiana, where assisting Louisiana police helped them set up an ambush. More than 100 shots were fired into their car, killing Barrow and Parker, whose stolen Ford V-8 made for a makeshift hearse as it was towed from the scene.

Both Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow are buried in Dallas, Texas. But their death car lives on display at the Primm Valley Resort in Primm, Nevada. The four-door Ford sedan is said to have brought in millions for the owners in the museum. The Primm charges for admission, but just consider for a moment how much this "free" car cost Parker and Barrow.

You can see a great short film on the pair from the History Channel in this YouTube clip:





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